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Chapter 14 EQUITY VALUATION How to Find Your Bearings.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 14 EQUITY VALUATION How to Find Your Bearings."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 14 EQUITY VALUATION How to Find Your Bearings

2 OUTLINE Balance Sheet Valuation Dividend Discount Model Earnings Multiplier Approach Earnings – Price Ratio, Expected Return, and Growth Other Comparative Valuation Ratios Equity Portfolio Management Forecasting the Aggregate Stock Market Return

3 BALANCE SHEET VALUATION BOOK VALUE LIQUIDATION VALUE REPLACEMENT COST

4 DIVIDEND DISCOUNT MODEL SINGLE PERIOD VALUATION MODEL D 1 P 1 P 0 = + (1+r) (1+r) MULTI - PERIOD VALUATION MODEL  D t P 0 =  t=1(1+r) t ZERO GROWTH MODEL D P 0 = r CONSTANT GROWTH MODEL D 1 P 0 = r - g

5 TWO - STAGE GROWTH MODEL 1 - 1+g 1 n 1+r P n P 0 =D 1 + r - g 1 (1+r) n WHERE P n D 1 (1+g 1 ) n-1 (1+g 2 ) 1 = (1+r) n r - g 2 (1+r) n

6 TWO - STAGE GROWTH MODEL : EXAMPLE

7 H MODEL g a g n H 2H D 0 P O = [(1+g n ) + H (g a + g n )] r - g n D 0 (1+g n ) D 0 H (g a + g n ) = + r - g n r - g n VALUE BASED PREMIUM DUE TO ON NORMAL ABNORMAL GROWH GROWTH RATE RATE

8 ILLUSTRATION: H LTD D 0 = 1 g a = 25% H = 5 g n = 15% r = 18% 1 (1.15)1 x 5(.25 -.15) P 0 = + 0.18 - 0.15 0.18 - 0.15 = 38.33 + 16.67 = 55.00 IF E = 2P/E = 27.5

9 IMPACT OF GROWTH ON PRICE, RETURNS, AND P/E RATIO PRICE DIVIDEND CAPITAL PRICE D 1 YIELD GAINS EARNINGS P O = YIELD RATIO r - g (D 1 / P O ) (P 1 - P O ) / P O (P / E) RS. 2.00 LOW GROWTH FIRM P O = = RS.13.33 15.0% 5.0% 4.44 0.20 - 0.05 RS. 2.00 NORMALGROWTH P O = = RS.20.00 10.0% 10.0% 6.67 FIRM 0.20 - 0.10 RS. 2.00 SUPERNORMAL P O = = RS.40.00 5.0% 15.0% 13.33 GROWTH FIRM 0.20 - 0.15

10 EARNINGS MULTIPLIER APPROACH P 0 = m E 1 DETERMINANTS OF m (P / E) D 1 P 0 = r - g E 1 (1 - b) = r - ROE x b (1 - b) P 0 / E 1 = r - ROE x b

11 CROSS -SECTION REGRESSION ANALYSIS P / E = 8.2 + 1.5g + 6.7b -.2  g = GROWTH RATE FOR ‘NORMALIZED’ EPS b = PAYOUT RATIO  = STD. DEV.. OF % EPS CHANGE EVERY CONCEIVABLE VARIABLE & COMBINATION OF VAIRABLES.. TRIED.. ALMOST.. ALL … THESE MODELS.. HIGHLY SUCCESSFUL.. EXPLAINING STOCK PRICES.. AT A POINT.. TIME, BUT LESS SUCCESSFUL … IN SELECTING APPROPRIATE.. STOCKS.. BUY.. SELL. WHY 1. MARKET TASTES CHANGE WEIGHTS CHANGE 2. INPUT VALUES CHANGE OVER TIME DIV … & GROWTH IN EARNINGS 3. THERE ARE FIRM EFFECTS NOT CAPTURED BY THE MODEL

12 P / E BENCHMARK RULES OF THUMB GROWTH RATE IN EARNINGS 10% 15% 20% 25% 35% 1 1 = 8.33 NOMINAL INTEREST RATE.12 1 = 5.00.20 1 1 = 25 REAL RETURN.04 1 = 16.67.06 0.5 PAYOUT RATIO = 16.67.18 -.15REQ. RET - GR. RATE

13 GROWTH AND P / E MULTIPLE CASE A : NO GROWTH CASE B : 10 PERCENT GROWTH YEAR 0YEAR 1YEAR 0YEAR 1 TOTAL ASSETS 100 100 100 110 NET WORTH 100 100 100 110 SALES 100 100 100 110 PROFIT AFTER TAX 20 20 20 22 DIVIDENDS 20 20 10 11 RETAINED EARNINGS - - 10 11 CASE A CASE B NO GROWTHGROWTH DISCOUNT DISCOUNT DISCOUNT DISCOUNT DISCOUNT DISCOUNT RATE: 15% RATE: 20% RATE: 25% RATE: 15% RATE: 20% RATE: 25% VALUE 20 / 0.15 20 / 0.20 20 / 0.25 10 / (0.15 10 / (0.20 10 / (0.25 - 0.10) - 0.10) - 0.10) = 133.3= 100 = 80 = 200 = 100 = 66.7 PRICE- 133.3 / 20100 / 20 80 / 20 200 /20 100 / 20 66.7 / 20 EARNINGS = 6.67 = 5.0 = 4.0 = 10.0 = 5.0 = 3.33 MULTIPLE

14 E / P, EXPECTED RETURN, AND GROWTH 12 ……... E 1 = D 1 E 2 = D 2 = 15 = 15 15 r = 15% P 0 = = 100 0.15 INVESTMENT.. RS. 15 PER SHARE IN YEAR 1 … EARNS 15% 2.25 NPV PER SHARE= - 15 + = 0 0.15

15

16 PRICE TO BOOK VALUE RATIO (PBV RATIO) Market price per share at time t PBV ratio = Book value per share at time t The PBV ratio has always drawn the attention of investors. During the 1990s Fama and others suggested that the PBV ratio explained to a significant extent the returns from stocks.

17 DETERMINANTS OF THE PBV RATIO D 1 P 0 = r – g D 1 = E 1 (1 – b) = E 0 (1 + g) (1 – b) E 0 (1 + g) (1 – b) r – g E 0 = BV 0 x ROE BV 0 (ROE) (1 + g) (1 – b) r – g P 0 ROE (1 + g) (1 – b) BV 0 r - g P 0 = PBV ratio = =

18 PRICE TO SALES RATIO (PSR RATIOS) In recent years PSR has received a lot of attention as a valuation tool. The PSR is calculated by dividing the current market value of equity capital by annual sales of the firm. Portfolios of low PSR stocks tend to outperform portfolios of high PSR stocks. It makes more sense to look at PSR/Net profit margin as net profit margin is a key driver of PSR.

19 EQUITY PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT PASSIVE STRATEGY BUY AND HOLD STRATEGY INDEXING STRATEGY ACTIVE STRATEGY MARKET TIMING SECTOR ROTATION SECURITY SELECTION USE OF A SPECIALISED CONCEPT

20 FORECASTING THE AGGREGATE STOCK MARKET RETURN Stock market returns are determined by an interaction of two factors : investment returns and speculative returns. In formal terms : SMR n = [DY n + EG n ] + [(PE n / PE 0 ) 1/n – 1] Investment return Speculative return where : SMR n = annual stock market return over a period of n years DY n = annual dividend yield over a period of n years EG n = annual earnings growth over a period of n years PE n = price-earnings ratio at the end of n years PE 0 = price-earnings ratio at the beginning of n years.

21 ILLUSTRATION Suppose you want to forecast the annual return from the stock market over the next five years (n is equal to 5). You come up with the following estimates. DY 5 = 0.025 (2.5 percent), EG 5 = 0.125 (12.5 percent), and PE 5 = 18. The current PE ratio, PE o, is 15. The forecast of the annual return from the stock market is determined as follows: SMR 5 = [0.025 + 0.125] + [(18/15) 1/5 – 1] = [0.15] + [0.037] = 15 percent + 3.7 percent = 18.7 percent 15 percent represents the investment return and 3.7 percent represents the speculative return.

22 SUMMING UP While the basic principles of valuation are the same for fixed income securities as well as equity shares, the factors of growth and risk create greater complexity in the case of equity shares. Three valuation measures derived from the balance sheet are: book value, liquidation value, and replacement cost. According to the dividend discount model, the value of an equity share is equal to the present value of dividends expected from its ownership. If the dividend per share grows at a constant rate, the value of the share is : P 0 = D 1 / (r – g) A widely practised approach to valuation is the P/E ratio or earnings multiplier approach. The value of a stock, under this approach, is estimated as follows: P 0 = E 1 x P 0 /E 1

23 In general, we can think of the stock price as the capitalised value of the earnings under the assumption of no growth plus the present value of growth opportunities (PVGo) E 1 P 0 = + PVGO r Apart from the price-earnings ratio, price to book value (PBV) ratio and price to sales (PSR) ratio are two other widely used comparative valuation ratios Two broad approaches are followed in managing an equity portfolio : passive strategy and active strategy. Stock market returns are determined by an interaction of two factors : investement returns and speculative returns.


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